A lot of my gaming time over the years has been taken up
with collectable/trading card games. I have quite a lot of them and I thought
instead of doing individual reviews for them, as that would be very time
consuming and boring for those who’s preference is not having their wallet
savaged on a quarterly basis, I would instead have a little waffle about my
experience and opinion on them. This is more of a ramble so apologise if it
seems unpolished!
At the beginning of my gaming life I, like many, forayed
into the world of Trading Card Games (TCGs) initially by the purchase of a
starter set, in my case of Digimon the TCG. I bought the set for the franchise
and not the game but soon had a game or two and enjoyed the gameplay and
followed my friend into the murky world of the Pokémon TCG soon after, spending
much of my teenage earnings on cards that to this day take up space in my
house. We also picked up some Marvel Overpower sets but to this day I have
never played a single game.
I gave up on TCGs after a relatively short time until some
years ago the same friend with whom played Pokémon handed me five starter decks
of Magic the Gathering cards he had recently come into possession of, and not
having any interest hadn’t even de-shrink-wrapped them.
I had, over the years of being a comic book collector and
comic shop regular, had some knowledge of this Magic beast being a popular game
and even had a few cards knocking around that often popped up in promotional
packs with comics/magazines. With this knowledge I thought ‘what could be the
harm in giving it a whirl?’............ Thus began the accumulation and
addiction to which I still occasionally relapse into!
Magic the Gathering, for those two and a half people who do
not know, is the granddaddy of what you would call a TCG these days. Designed
by Richard Garfield and first released in 1993 to much fan fair Magic the
Gathering quickly spawned many imitators and would be rivals but would hold
fast and be one of the most popular and most played TCGs up to and including
now as you read this. I had dabbled with what I later found out to be one or
two derivatives of the MTG formula but now I was playing with Genesis and I was
quickly hooked. I still state that my friend needs to suffer some form of
recompense for passing me those five packs of cards. Supply with intent is
easily punishable!
I set about inducting others into the cult of cardboard and
quickly had a sizeable group of fellow addicts and my addiction flowed into
other TCGs, amassing a formidable assortment of games, many of which never got
past the first purchase of starter box and a couple of boosters (I always had
to buy at least two boosters to go along with any starter) but some became
regular purchase games such as Pokémon, my partner being the bigger collector
as is proven by the thousands of cards she owns, the VS. System both DC and Marvel
varieties, Duel Masters, now rebranded as Kaijudo, WCW Nitro, My Little Pony
(really, I’m serious, it’s a good game but don’t take it to the pub for an
afternoon game over a pint, you’ll draw the wrong sort of looks, especially if
you a a large hairy man such as I!) Star Trek CCG, and I will also include the
Pocket model TCG system in this list as it still is a TCG despite featuring
small models.
A Couple of years ago I began to purchase board games,
starting with an old copy of Heroquest and moving up to Descent and Talisman
before discovering Euro games. Soon the budget for both collections began to
clash. I was often faced with a choice of a new board game that I liked the
look of or a new wave of MTG cards and this was when the realization of my
addiction came into focus. I realized what most TCGs, MTG, Pokemon, Yu-Gi-Oh
etc, did and why my money seemed to disappear at regular intervals.
Every three months there is a new wave of cards released.
These cards more often than not totally overpower the majority of the prior
releases cards or relegate them to a lesser standard so you buy new and tweak
your deck to use the new hotness, if you have any competitive players in your
group or you wish to play at a higher level than your kitchen table you also
find yourself looking at buying singles from dealers to build yourself a
competition quality deck which can cost a fortune dependant on which cards you
need for any given theme. This is where they have you! You throw money at each
new release without question, the majority of which you’ll never even play with
if you buy boosters, and build/tweak your deck, play with it for a few months
then the next release drops. Rinse and repeat. When faced with this realisation
I made the difficult decision to cut TCGs for the most part and concentrate on
more complete games. Deck builders, board games etc.
I have friends whose ONLY gaming choice is a TCG/CCG (trying
to get them to play anything else can be difficult) and the monetary output to
keep the decks viable is enough to make a politicians accountant short of
breath!
That being said, and as I previously mentioned, I often
relapse into my MTG. Usually when I see some really nice new artwork, Which is
one of the greatest thing about MTG, the artwork on most of the cards is
absolutely amazing! Or when I have an itch and dare to have a quick game, which
turns into a few which then devolves into a wallet assaulting dash to town for
a booster fix!
TCGs and CCGs will always be a thorn in my wallet as with
many other sufferers, especially if I see a groovy starter set, and I don’t
think I will ever be rid of the addiction, but that being said, the games are
good enough to keep me coming back and not regretting it either! They represent
a gaming dichotomy to which I am hopelessly entwined and more than likely will
be for the rest of my gaming life but I say to thee “MEH, Worth it!”